Brilliant logic. Oswald was seen at the boardinghouse. Then he is seen at the Tippit murder scene. But we are told "there is no way Oswald could have been there." Wow. Only a person in the legal profession could make that argument. Once a thing has happened, the odds against it happening become moot. They are trumped by reality. Multiple witnesses place Oswald at the Tippit scene. He was there whether he walked or strapped jet engines to his backside. All the debarred defense attorney arguments in the world don't change the facts.
Says the legal eagle who relies on bogus biased line ups by eyewitnesses who, as any competent lawyer knows, provide the least reliable evidence.
Since none of the witnesses were ever cross-examined by a defense lawyer, only an idiot would take their word as gospel.
Richard doesn't seem to understand that in a murder investigation all sorts of people say all sorts of things. When an investigator finds that a particular person could not have been at the crime scene, it only means that the witness was wrong or mistaken....... You know, like all those witnesses who were wrong at DP!
Btw, misquoting me doesn't really make your "argument" any more convincing.